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January / February 2022

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MAKING KENNETH BRANAGH'S BELFAST B elfast, from Focus Features, is a movie straight from writer/director Kenneth Branagh's own experience. The film ta es a humorous, tender and personal look at one boy's childhood during the tumultuous late 1960s in the city of Branagh's birth. The nine-year-old must chart a path towards adulthood through a world that has suddenly turned upside down. His stable and loving community, and every- thing he thought he understood about life, is changed forever. But, for him, joy, laughter, music and the formative magic of the movies remain. Belfast stars Caitríona Balfe, Judi Dench, Jamie Dornan, Ciarán Hinds and Jude Hill. The film eceived seven Oscar nominations, including those for Actor in a Supporting Role (Hinds), Actress in a Supporting Role (Dench), Directing (Branagh), Original Song ("Down To Joy" — Van Morrison), Sound (Denise Yarde, Simon Chase, James Mather and Niv Adiri) and Motion Picture. The project was shot on Arri Alexa Mini LF at 1.85:1 and at 4.5K. Editor Una Ni Dhonghaile cut the feature using Avid Media Composer 2018.12. "We worked with Digital Orchard in London," recalls Dhonghaile. "DNxHD115, 8-bit, 1080p video files ere generated in Resolve and transported to editorial in Twickenham via Shuttle, with all documentation, ALEs and CSVs, as well as original sound. Owing to the pandemic restrictions, we all had to work remote- ly from the third week of shoot, so I returned to my studio in Dublin and every- thing was simultaneously made available to download. The fir t assistant would email me the relevant Avid scene bins each morning to begin editing." Dhonghaile says one of the film s greatest challenges was a "holistic one," where she had to find the be t pace and tempo, while keeping Buddy's subjec- tive point of view alive. "We used sound and music as characters to enrich the film and further e - hance the specificity of a memory or captu e a moment in time," she explains. "One such moment was the fir t riot, and the challenge was to find the be t way to recreate Sir Kenneth Branagh's childhood experience. Ken remem- bers returning to his street after playing and the sound of buzzing bees that stopped him in his tracks until he realized that this was the sound of a violent mob descending on his street. As Buddy hears a noise, Ken and (cinematogra- pher) Haris Zambarloukas used a circular track to capture his confusion. This was shot at 60fps, so in the edit, I could add a time warp effect to play with film speed and enhan e the distortion and confusion, ramping from 24fps to 48fps, to 36fps back to 60fps and so on as the camera encircled the child. A more creative sound bed of muffled and d torted sounds, to emulate that 'buzzing' in the ears, was also created, and then an explosion breaks the unre- ality and chaos ensues." By using a faster, more visceral editing style, Dhonghaile says the psycholog- ical experience of the family is revealed. "Ken shot with two cameras for this scene. There was a magnifi ent amount of rushes to mine. Some shots used were as short as 12 frames, but you could see them — a chain swinging, a window breaking, a family fleeing. he subjec- tive point of view shifts from Buddy to Ma, as she hides him under the table and we jump cut with her as she crawls on her knees to peep out the window. "Caitríona Balfe's performance was so strong and she resembled a warrior mother as she deflec ed the stones off a bin lid — sh wn in slow motion — which had acted as Buddy's play shield when the film began, and doing very- thing she could to protect her family. "The CU profile shot of Ma t the window and the BCU of the children under the table allowed us to hone in on the sound of their breath, which heightened the sense of their vulnerability as the car explodes. Then, by using a cut to black, the horror of this moment landed for the audience, before hearing Ma whisper in the darkness 'Oh holy God.' "This scene was cut with a more 'social realist' bias and no music, and, in contrast, the later riot was shot and edited in a more magic realism style, with the High Noon theme informing the cut and allowing us see that riot through Buddy's imagination." N E X T I S S U E REMOTE WORKFLOWS Industry pros discuss their varied workflows and how they've adapted to working outside their facilities WORKSTATIONS Leading manufacturers show off their latest desktop and mobile workstations MUSIC AND SOUND Exciting soundtracks from films, streaming and television content Post On-Demand — The latest podcasts and exclusive features Product Spotlight — Premium placement for the latest post tools MARI KOHN 818.291.1153 | mkohn@postmagazine.com CO N TACT U S A B O U T P R I N T & O N L I N E A DV E RT I S I N G O P P O RT U N I T I ES : ISSUE DATE: M A RC H /A P R I L 2 0 2 2 SPACE CLOSE: M A RC H 1 5 T H MATERIAL CLOSE: M A RC H 2 2 N D MADAME X MAKING MADONNA'S PARAMOUNT+ CONCERT FILM W H E R E T E C H N O L O G Y A N D TA L E N T M E E T S M www.postmagazine.com POST NOV/DEC 2021 PLUS: OUTLOOK 2022 DIRECTORS SWOT EDITING: THE FRENCH DISPATCH REVIEW: FAIRLIGHT DESKTOP CONSOLE B O N US D I ST R I B U T I O N N A B 2 0 2 2 A P R I L 2 3 R D -A P R I L 27 T H OSCARS www.postmagazine.com 6 POST JAN/FEB 2022

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